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Thank you for your interest in
our company. I would like to take the liberty to give you
some information on my background and share with you some of
my aspirations and goals in founding Encore China.
Among many of the blessings I
count everyday is that I am Chinese by birth and American by
choice. I am richly blessed with the best of both heritages.
I was born in Chongqing, raised in Nanjing until I was four
and half years old when my father put the entire family on a
ship in Shanghai for Hong Kong. I came to the United States
when I was seventeen years old.
I am very fortunate that my
father was the last generation of Chinese scholars educated
in the Chinese classics dating back to the dawn of the
Chinese civilization. He spent his youth in preparing
himself for the Chinese civil service examinations in the
waning days of the Qing Dynasty. He never took those
examinations as he joined the revolutionary movement led by
Dr. Sun Yatsen and helped to overthrow the Qing Dynasty.
I learned a lot from my father
even though I lost him in my teenage years. What I learned
from my father prepared me well for my early years in
Virginia and West Virginia. Back in those days, there were
hardly any Asians in the south. Very often I found myself to
be the only Asian in town.
I missed my Chinese food, but I
was very fortunate that I became thoroughly Americanized
without trying. I surprised more than a few fellow students
and professors when I showed up in English literature
classes as an English minor in college.
You should have listened to me
discussing the works of Shelly, Tennyson, James Joyce,
Faulkner, and Hemingway in my Chinese accent! I went on to
graduate school at West Virginia University and completed my
doctoral in psychology. I taught for eleven years at
Elizabethtown College in Pennsylvania.
My love for travel led me to
establishing a full-service travel agency in 1976. I
returned to China for the first time in 1987. I was
impressed by what I saw. China had just opened up to the
outside world, and I could sense the joy and excitement of
the Chinese people I encountered. Everyone was looking
forward to the future. They had that unshakable faith that
tomorrow would be better. Of course, they were right.
As much as I was impressed by
what I saw in China, I did not pursue developing tourism to
China then. I concluded the infrastructures were just not
ready for most American visitors. Also, I became preoccupied
with raising two children who were born in 1986 and 1989.
I did not return to China again
until 1999. That trip turned out to be a life-changing
event. I made up my mind then and there that my mission was
to introduce China to my fellow Americans.
The United States and China are
the two dominating world powers in the years to come.
America is a modern state in search of a civilization. China
is an ancient civilization in search of a modern state. The
more we know and understand each other, the better the world
will be.
Members of our team and I are
upset when visitors return from China with unpleasant or
unsatisfactory experiences. Our goal is to give our guests
the best experience possible within the parameters we work
with. Our tours are not designed for mass marketing or
maximum profit; they are designed to give our guests the
best and most meaningful experience in China. We are
constantly learning ourselves.
China is a very dynamic
country. It is literally changing right in front of our
eyes. We are very fortunate to be living in such an exciting
time. We invite you to explore and experience China with us.
It will be our honor and privilege to show you the land we
so love.
I look forward to hearing from
you.
Robert C. Cheung, President
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